SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
Members' Chat
>
Sci-Fi and Fantasy?

The Canadian science fiction writer, Robert J. Sawyer, put it a bit differently. "Science fiction deals with things that might possibly happen (or, in the case of the subgenre of science fiction known as alternate history, things that possibly could have happened); fantasy deals with things that never could happen"
So where does that leave China Mievilles 'Perdito Street Station' or 'Railsea' etc? You might get away with saying That PSS is a planet thousands of years in the future where many alien races settled then lost their technology but Railsea is just impossible but without the 'magic' element to make it fantasy.
Trike wrote: Mieville's work is CLEARLY Fantasy. There's no argument at all. Nothing he writes is the least bit possible.."
I can't even begin to grasp where you are coming from in order to refute what you say :-) To each his own.

The Canadian science fiction wr..."
I picked up a China Miéville book at the library once. I couldn't finish it. All I remember about it is that he always typed '&' instead of spelling out 'and.' That's not the reason I gave up on it after about 100 pages, though. It just did not appeal to me.

It is by no means hard and fast, so fighting about it is a waste of valuable reading time. "
Genre existed before marketing, so that's not an argument I buy. It's a convenient cop-out, I find. Marketing doesn't change what something *is*, after all. Kraft was having a hard time selling their various types of shredded cheese until they changed the labeling and attendant marketing of the product. Once it was called "Italian Cheese" and "Mexican Taco Cheese", sales picked up. Exact same cheese, simple change in marketing.
I like talking about genre, as well as trying to decide which genre a particular work belongs in. It's fun. I can find 30 million people in America alone who think whatever it is you're into is the stupidest waste of time they've ever heard of, too. Doesn't change the fact that you like it, does it?

I can't even begin to grasp where you are coming from in order to refute what you say :-) To each his own. ."
Not sure what you mean. Giant insects are biologically impossible. Fantasy. Vampires can't exist. Fantasy. A whole bunch of other stuff he writes is impossible. Fantasy.
That's where I'm coming from. Impossible = Fantasy.

Very good point! Taste is personal, and genre is one of the key ways we have of having some idea whether or not a particular book will appeal to us before we start reading it. Tone and mood are others for me, but reviews and blurbs seldom mention these.




In my opinion it would make more sense to give each definition a different word instead of arguing over which ones get to be "science fiction" and "fantasy."

Which is precisely why we should ignore marketing. When Science Fiction wasn't cool -- and it still isn't, in many hoity-toity circles -- publishers refused to market some books as SF. Frank Herbert and Anne McCaffrey once got into an argument over who had the first bestseller labelled as Science Fiction. When someone asked them why that was important, she snapped, "Because it's about time we were honest about what we write!"
Does anyone really believe Margaret Atwood's absurd assertions that she made for years that she wasn't writing Science Fiction? None of it was marketed as such, but everyone knows exactly what it is.
In their early days, Blockbuster Video used to only have four sections to shelve videos: Drama, Comedy, Special Interest and New Releases. No one I know ever categorized movies so simply.
Ignore marketing. They cater to the market, not tell the truth.

I haven't read these, so I can't speak to them specifically. Mostly because I gave up on Mieville as a result of the fact that I just didn't like his writing. It's cool if you like his stuff; it's just not for me.
How is the vampire handled in Blindsight? One can easily come up with science fictional rationales for most typical Fantasy creatures. Genetic engineering is more than suitable for unicorns, dragons and the like. One can even spin some physics theories for ghosts. But a classic vampire that can change into a wolf, a bat or a mist, can not cross running water or doesn't cast a reflection in a mirror? You can't get around that stuff.
David Weber's recent novel Out of the Dark starts off as a standard alien invasion story then inexplicably takes a left turn as Dracula shows up to defeat the aliens. Despite the fact that's the sole supernatural element, it's pretty obviously a Fantasy book because that's the category for impossible things. One such item can change the genre, despite all the other things in the story.

DL wrote: "I picked up a China Miéville book at the library once. I couldn't finish it. All I remember about it is that he always typed '&' instead of spelling out 'and.' That's not the reason I gave up on it after about 100 pages, though. It just did not appeal to me."
That's Railsea. The ampersands annoyed me too, although it is actually explained in the book why they're used. His works are very diverse though, so if you didn't like the Boy's Own Adventure of Railsea, you might enjoy one of his adult works.
Trike wrote: "Does anyone really believe Margaret Atwood's absurd assertions that she made for years that she wasn't writing Science Fiction? None of it was marketed as such, but everyone knows exactly what it is."
She has a very well thought out argument as to why she doesn't believe it is SF (and it's not that she doesn't like SF), it just doesn't match yours very well. ;) Her argument is that anything currently deemed possible would be SFF and stuff not currently deemed possible would be SF (she puts fantasy as a subgenre of SF). Personally I'd use SFF as an umbrella term for not-realistic-fiction (SF, fantasy, horror, magical realism, UF, paranormal-anything), but that doesn't make her definition absurd.

I don't know - her comments relegating sci-fi to "monsters and spaceships" and "talking squids in outer space" doesn't sound, to me, like she's a huge fan of sci-fi...

I see post-apocalypse fiction as alternate history, and group alternate history with SciFi because of the obvious Many Worlds angle. Of course, my reasoning is spurious, and only exists because I like to think of myself as a rational being (my taxonomy is more affective than cognitive). If I liked Fantasy but not SciFi, yet still happened to like post-apocalyptic-alternate history, I would probably try to (certainly could) make the argument that it was Fantasy (Urban Fantasy). I saw Handmaid’s Tale as SciFi. After she published, Atwood’s classification became irrelevant.

It sounds like the problem is that when a book could potentially appeal to more than one reading subculture, it only gets marketed to the biggest one. Marketing could still be a useful criterion if the rule is to assign books to the genre they're marketed as and any others they could have been marketed as.

What about the only China Miéville, and his first book, King Rat that is never discussed? Where would you put that book on the fantasy or science fiction scale?

I think there's a fair bit of room between a huge SF fan and someone who dislikes SF. Atwood is impish and snarky, so I would take that into account when reading the quote. :) She's described herself as "the Willy Wonka of the literary arts", and apparently read a lot of SF pulp when she was young, as well as the SF classics. She did write this just the other year too: In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination, it's based on her Ellmann Lectures, and I think it says a lot that she did her Ellmann Lectures on the theme "SF and the human imagination".
Kevin wrote: "Evilynn wrote: "
What about the only China Miéville, and his first book, King Rat that is never discussed? Where would you put that book on the fantasy or science fiction scale? "
It's a retelling of the Pied Piper, set in London in the late 1990ies, so UF, I'd say. There's certainly no science in it as far as I can remember. A fair bit of music and magical rats though.

Anything with (fictional) science in it, or anything with a bit of magic/majik/magick in it, or any (definable) supernatural creature in it......all fell under this umbrella!
No-one argued. SFF was it!
(Simple, ain't it??) :)

I think th..."
Thanks!


Anything with (fictional) science in it, or anything with a bit of magic/majik/magick in it, or any..."
I like to turn back the clock, too! Back to when we only had four colors to write about! By god, if the masters didn't need to use the word "blue", then neither do we!
Simple, right?!
Starting around 46 minutes into this podcast: http://www.radiolab.org/2012/may/21/?...

I'm pretty sure that was done by publishers who A)assumed that the only people reading the stuff was snot-nosed kids, and B)didn't know the difference themselves.
I much prefer to narrow down my genres, since I don't want to read everything considered fantasy and SF... or, for that matter, I don't want to read everything that's considered SF.



Expectation derived from the category tags is a problem. For me SF and F are more than just an exposé on events or sentiments in an impossible or possible future tech setting, they are about pushing frontiers and exploring new ideas.
With creativity in mind, I think over categorisation is limiting for both the writer and the reader, as it forces expectations.
In terms of categorisation I would prefer something analytic, which is attached post manuscript completion. In that fashion the author is not constrained, and the reader can still make quick selections of what they fancy reading.
For example, something I would find more useful than the SF and F genres would be an indication of the book's setting, the tone of the book, and the book's focus. e.g. it takes place in an Iron Age tech setting, is written in a humorous though caustically cynical manner, and is dynastically focused. That way I would know what qualities I was getting without thinking magic, or space ships. I'd like to know what the writer's voice is like too, but characterising that sort of thing is so highly personal that it's doubtful that it would be possible. Prose however, is another matter entirely. I'd like to be warned if a book has bad prose.

i completely agree.. i couldnt believe i read someone saying he wasnt fantasy. How can you explain all the fantastic idea's and people in Perdido for example?

I thought I was the only one who felt like that! In fact, the term I've come up with for what I write is "imaginative fiction". I also have used "imagine-lit" or "the genre of imagination".
Maybe that seems like a pretty broad term, but the kinds of things I write and am drawn to as a reader are pretty broad as well. But there is this thread that seems to run through everything from fairy tales to super hero stories, to mythology, and edge of the universe epics which delights in imagining new worlds and new "rules" for these imaginary places we get to visit in these stories.
Those are the tales which I love best.

If we are labeling, then I think the shared sense of wonder is what appeals to me rather than questions as to whether it can happen in "real life". The speculative fiction label has always felt ugly and overly academic but unfortunately, it's accurate. What l'd like is some more powerful term with the same range. "
Nuclear Jesus?
That would be a pretty powerful genre descriptor.
"What's this about?"
"Nuclear Jesus!"

"Literature" is defined as fiction that someone with a Ph.D. in Literature liked.

So that would be more like Atomic Buddha?

Speculative fiction (or whatever you want to call it) is widely varied, and because it is, well, speculative, it resists accurate labeling. That doesn't mean we can't try. Like Ron, I was also a philosophy major, and bending terms to fit ideas is kind of what we do. I suppose that's why people with philosophy degrees seem to end up as writers or comedians. Not that there are many other career opportunities. It's not like we can open up a philosophy shop. :-)


Yep. I much prefer more empiricist philosopher/novelists like Douglas Adams or Terry Pratchett. :-)

I once told a college professor (after a dreary Lit course in which she had us reading nothing but Existentialists -- Camus, Kafka, etc.) that I HATE that miserable, dreary stuff. In fact, I told her, that's why I read Science Fiction; because SF writers believe there WILL BE a future, not a dreary, endless repetition of the present. Existentialism, in five words: Life sucks... then you die.

One of the towns where I used to live had a philosophy shop. It was called "The Philosophy Shop." They had an eclectic collection of used books for sale, others that were available for reference but not for sale, comfy chairs, chess set rental for $2 a night, self-serve coffee and tea for a $1.50 a bottomless cup, philosophy reading groups that met on a rotating basis during the week, and regular speakers on a variety of topics. It was wonderful. It closed down when the owner became too ill to continue to run it. I think that it was only successful as long as it was because it was in a college town.
But it worked at least once.

It sounds wonderful. There is a university here in Orlando, a large one, but I wouldn't call it a college town. It's more of a theme park town. :-)

I once told a college professor (after a dreary Lit course in which she had us reading nothing but Existentialists -- Camus, ..."
Made me giggle, but I would say that the core precept of existentialism is that you may only know you exist through interaction with your environment, so although a lot of the literature is pretty grim, it is a philosophy that seeks change through action.
Or. . .
Life sucks - kick 'em in da fork.

One of the towns where I used to live had a philosophy shop. It was called "The Philosophy Shop." They had an eclectic collecti..."
Made me think of the Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind in Stephen King's Dark Tower series. Beats WHSmiths.

That was the exact reasoning why George Lucas introduced Midiclorians in his Star Wars Universe.
Before that, the force was a magical power, which made his Universe fantasy.
Having the force be driven my microscopic organisms talking to each other is a sci-fi biology- as any Alien species would be.
This was a critical distinction as Mr. Lucas wanted to ensure there was no confusion with calling his Universe FANTASY, compared to Sci-Fi (a long time ago, in a galaxy far away).


And for years I thought they were talking about mitochondria. Now I'm disillusioned.
Books mentioned in this topic
In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination (other topics)King Rat (other topics)
Railsea (other topics)
Embassytown (other topics)
Out of the Dark (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
China Miéville (other topics)China Miéville (other topics)
Peter Watts (other topics)
B.J. Whittington (other topics)
Peter F. Hamilton (other topics)
It is by no means hard and fast, so fighting about it is a waste of valuable reading time.